Ken Kutaragi to become Chairman of Cellius

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Blade_Runner

Forerunner
Ken Kutaragi to become Chairman of Cellius

BandaiNamco and SCEI today announced that they are forming a new Tokyo-based subsidiary company, Cellius, in a bid to develop fresh content for Sony's Cell Broadband Engine. Cellius will be in the hands of "PlayStation's dad", Ken Kutaragi, who will be appointed as the new company's Chairman.

Initial investment from BandaiNamco and SCEI is approximately US$824,000; SCEI will have a 49% stake in Cellius, with BandaiNamco controlling a 51% share. Although there are no plans for Cellius to work directly on PS3 games, the new outfit will be producing "interactive entertainment" and "business contents" when its doors open on March 6. What those terms actually entail, we'll just have to wait and see, but perhaps Ken Kutaragi will now have a fair opportunity to show us what he was talking about at last year's Tokyo Game Show conference.

Ken Kutaragi to become Chairman of Cellius - Joystiq
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Lmao took sony long enough to boot Ken. This was coming all along after the delays, launch fiasco and the initial poor sales.
 
Sony calls on Ken to save PS3

KEN Kutaragi, the engineer known as the father of the Sony PlayStation video game console, is to split his time between Sony and a new joint venture with Japan's Namco Bandai, as Sony attempts to reinforce fraying ties with third-party game developers.

The new venture, Cellius, comes as US and Japanese sales of PlayStation3 - launched in November - have slowed dramatically in the face of high prices and a shortage of "must-have" games.

Mr Kutaragi will continue as chairman of Sony Computer Entertainment while serving as a part-time executive director at the new venture, 51 per cent owned by Namco and 49 per cent by Sony.

Mr Kutaragi's appearance on the Cellius board comes just seven weeks after he was made chairman of SCE, a nominal promotion which removed him from the day-to-day running of the business amid signs of strained relations with Sony chief executive Sir Howard Stringer.

Cellius has the task of developing games that exploit the advanced capabilities of the PS3's powerful Cell processor.

The Cell chip, co-designed by Sony, Toshiba and IBM, boasts supercomputing capacity, but game studios have yet to tap its full potential, given the high cost of designing games for the PS3.

Some observers speculate that by giving Namco Bandai direct access to Mr Kutaragi, Sony is hoping to ensure the loyalty of a developer whose only two PS3 games are the top and second-best selling titles for the console.

Credit Suisse games analyst Jay Defibaugh said Namco Bandai had assigned Isao Nakamura, one of its foremost games developers, to run the new joint venture, even though "developing games for the PS3 carries a lot of risk".

A Sony spokesman said the joint venture would not design software just for the PS3, but also for regular PCs, hand-held devices and mobile phones - all products offered by Sony.

Since November, three major Japanese games developers have acted to reduce their exposure to Sony's flagship console.

Square Enix said last month that Dragon Quest IX, the latest instalment in a series that racked up $US41 million ($53 million) in game sales for previous PlayStation consoles, would only be produced for Nintendo's hand-held DS machine.

Koei and Sega Sammy have both said that games previously earmarked as PS3 exclusives will now also be developed for its rival platforms, Nintendo's Wii and Microsoft's Xbox 360.

Sony still hopes PS3 sales will get a lift from promised exclusive sequels later this year in Square's Final Fantasy and Konami's Metal Gear Solid series.

The loss of exclusivity for the PS3 for either game would be a serious blow to the game console's short-term sales prospects, Nomura analyst Yuta Sakurai said.

Sony calls on Ken to save PS3 | FT business | The Australian
 
Cellius has the task of developing games that exploit the advanced capabilities of the PS3's powerful Cell processor.

This could produce some killer titles for Ps3. Namco and Sony teaming up is in fact just what the Ps3 needs.
 
Yes, but Ken will demand that the games be sold for $1000 and say that he wants people to take out mortgages to buy his game and also that people need his game because it is not just a game but also.... OK I can't think of something else he might say, but you get the drift.
 
Consoles have no set price standard, Games do! I don't think ever in consoles history has a game costed more than the then current set maximum standard (59.99 around when N64 release, lowered to 49.99 with the Ps1-Ps2 era, and jumped back up to 59.99 with this gen and should lower back to 49.99 by 2008 end or early). Nobody will buy the game if it costs more than set standard. I'm quite sure Ken is smart enough to know that, also, Namco has a larger share and thus more control so they won't let Ken get away with his ideas anymore :P
 
I feel sorry for Sony. Being a Japanese company, they can't just fire his ass, so they need to rehabilitate him somewhere where he will not cause so many media outrages.

I don't blame him for PS3's current set of problems - I blame him for his verbal gaffes.

I suppose this can be considered to be Sony's answer to (at one time) Nintendo's Rareware, and MS's bungie.
 
It's amazing what first place in a console race can do to a company... more specifically a group of people within it.
 
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